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Ata"" . ,. r, ,5, .... r r 'THE OGDEN, STANDARD: QGDEN, UTAH. MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1917. - 3 ' 1GM RECRUITS TD I STUDY WIRELESS 1 TELEGRAPHY HI : tiS CITY- Oct 14. Two of 1 1 i ; pngbam's young recruits, Fern and rFB Pett. "ho have been stationed h - i0 Ialand navy yard since their I Enlistment early in the summer, have fell ' r ? jusual distinction in being se- llM C J "w'Ith three others, to go to Har- IKHf rd, university to take a course in UK wireless telegraphy. The young men rtTdi r 60113 of fonncr county assessor nnd T firs Lorenzo Pott and they passed 4 M - through Ogden Saturday on the way fst- They were greeted in Ogden by II J tnflr Parents, and a brief reunion was I - 'h" enJoyed for a few minutes. 1 ' Arlow Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. h L E Anderson, who enlisted in the lb &i regular army from the Box Elder high h school last spring also received recog- 1 aition a few days ago and was sent to J N Iiittle Rock, Ark., along with three I ,1 hundred selected men to tako special j courses to preparo them for the front. Mr. Anderson has been supply ser- geant of his company. Ho passed through Salt Lake at midnight Friday olght, and was mot there by his par ents, who enjoyed a pleasant visit with their son during an hour's wait of the special train upon which the three I hundred soldiers were traveling. An- j derson was the youngest man in the n entire company of 300 men, being I slightly moro than eighteen years of 1 age. I Wednesday the Rev. G. B. Christen- J sen, president of the United Evangel- m ical Danish Luthoran church in Araer- I W ica, will visit this city and is slated i i i to deliver an address In the Presby- teriun church before a congregation t ' of his countrymen. The Danish rover ahd is (ouring the western states, and upon reaching California will take an important part in the celebration of I .' ' the 400th. Reformation Jubilee to be bold at various places throughout that Iii . TRY THIS JAPANESE I j -f COM REMEDY $ , Costs Little But Does the Work Qulck- Kj r j ly. No Pain. No Soreness. h I j ? ,3 Corn sufferers gather round; get Hj i J. right up close and listen. Here's good H ) news for you. HJ The rcil "Corn Killer" is hero at Hj j last, Ice-Mint, the New-Discovery, Hj made from a Japanese product, is said 't to surely and quickly end all foot mis-1 'm ery. H A Hard corns, soft corns, or corns be- iH j r tween the toes, also toughened cal- fK f C louses, just shrivel up and lift off easy. Hj f I It's wonderful. There is no pain or Hj ft soreness when applying ice-mint or aft- H I '"Pi erwards and it doesn't even irritate H T the skin. H rVj Think of it; just a touch or two of HB ) 5! that cooling soothing ice-mint and real Hj foot joy is yours. ri'' If your feel are inclined to swell or HH f X Puffi or if yu liave cracked or bleed- H j 1 inS toes, it will take the inflammation right out and quickly heal the sore and Hr bleeding places. I keeps them sweet and comfortable. It is the real Japanese secret for fine, healthy little feet, j Every person who has suffered with H stubborn corns or tender feet can ap 9 preciate the cooling, soothing comfort 1 that it brings; especially women whom jl fashion has decreed should wear high heeled shoes and men who have to stand all day on their feet. Try iL ; Get a fow cent3' worth of Ice-Mint from your druggist, today and give your poor, tired, suffering, burning feet the treat of their livos. There is nothing better. Advertisement. nn HI NINETY WARSfilPS I . MAKE AN ATTACK M r,.r )h PETROGRAD, Oct. 14. The Ger- Mhjj man forces which landed on Oesol Hjjj V , island in the Gulf of Riga, under the u 4 J over of ninety war vessels, have oc- Kf 'f cupied, up to 10 o'clock Saturday tiA morning, the whole northern and cast- r i' ern part of the island were within 12 Hl . versts of Arensburg, on the southern I shore, according to an announcement H f made today by the Russian naval gen- Hul J) eral staff. The Russian still occupy Uil Serel Point and the Svorb peninsula Hh on the southwestern coast. H It now develops that the Germans Ml did not occupy Dago island, north of U Oesel and at the head of the gulf of jn Finland. Ba ) Premier Kerensky, in an urgent ap- Hffl J Peal to the Baltic fleet to defend the BTl fatherland "in this hour of trial," di- M vulged the fact that the garrison of KJ Kronstadt, the chief fortress and mili- 41 ) tary port of Russia and the station of 4 V the Baltic fleet, twenty miles west of Bij Petrograd, by its attitude already has m' a weakened the defensive resources of H 3 the fortress. H'f "i Eight dreadnaughts, a dozen light m- cruisers, forty torpedo boats and mine Knb j sweepers participated in the German Vl j landing dn Oesel island. The people HmI ' J of Potrograd received tho news of the jl occupation calmly. The newspapers nVil 31 publish interviews with some of the B'luP. iMteP cabinet ministers and otliers who T"K: agree that while the operation scr- BwHB' iously affects Russia's strategic posi- U tIon !t does not constituto an imme- v,Jm dlate menace to the Russian capital. Hfll Premier Kerensky today sent a tele- i , ' .M gram to the commander-in-chief of the Bj ; :1 northern armies In which he said: lf "Tell the redoubtable Baltic fleet !! DENTISTS I II . CROWN PAINLESS )j j 'lEast Side Washington, be- fcj, jS tween 24th and 25th Street. Bil 4 2468 Washington Ave. Kir - that the hour of trial has arrived Russia expects for her safety a valiant effort by tho navy and I, as gen eralisslmo, demand that the Bailors make sacrifices. "The hour has como when the Baltic fleet can defend the honor of the fatherland and the great traditions oi liberty and of the revolution. It is time to roflect serious and to cease to co-operation involuntarily with the cause of the enemy. Tho garrison of Kronstadt has by its attitude already caused tho defensive resources of the fortress to be Incomplete. "Let all remember that tho father land will not forgivo criminal levity. Let the abominablo crime of the battleship Petropavlovsk be redeemed. Let tho fleet repulse tho enemy under the command of its officers whose patriotism is well known to all Russia." As the result of a misunderstanding that arose on board the Russian bat tleship Petropavlovsk out of the ac tion of the general assembly of the democratic bodies on calling upon officers of tho army and navy in Fin land to sign a pledge of fidelity to tho Russian provisional government, four officers who refused to sign the pledge were shot at Helsingfors last month by members of the crew. MORE DEADLY THAN ' A MAD DOG'S BITE Tho blto of a rabid dog In no longer deadly, due to the now famous Pnsteur Treatment, but tho slow, living death, tho resultant of poisoning of tho system by deadly uric acid is as Buro and In evitable as clay follows night No other organs of tho human body aro so Important to health making as tho kidneys and bladder. Keep your kid neys clean and your bladder In working condition and you need havo no fear of disease. Don't try to cheat nature. It Is a cruel master. Whenever you experi ence backache, nervousness, difficulty in passing urino, "get on tho Job." Your kidneys and bladder require immcdlato attention. Don't delay. This Is tho time to tako the bull by tho horns. GOLD arEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules will do the trick. For over two mindrcd years they have proven meritorious in tho treatment of diseases of tho stomach, kidneys, liver nnd bladder. It Is a world-famed remedy, in use as a house hold necessity for over 200 years. If you have been doctoring -without results, get a box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules today. Your druggists sells them. Absolutely guaranteed or money .refunded. Bewaro of Imitations. Look for the namo GOLD MEDAL on every box. Advertisement. on BRITISH FRONT IN PRANCE AND BELGIUM, Saturday, Oct 13. (By the Associated Press.) With the ex ception of two brief intervals of sun light there was a continuous hard rain today on the Belgian battle front. This was most important news from the new battle line for it meant that the low flying fields in Flanders were rap-; idly being turned into that state of, liquidation, which represented Flan ders at its worst and Flanders at its worst has few competitors. Troops in the forward lines of th.ej opposing armies were lying out in this wilderness of mud and water with little protection from the cold, driving i rain, watching Pach other but mak ing few attempts to stir from their morass-bound positions. The British wore clinging doggedly i to the strips of territory which they had wrested from the enemy on Friday. 'SAGETEABEftUTfFIES m OiiEi HI Don't Stay Gray! It Darkens So Naturally that No body can Tell. You can turn gray, faded hair beau tifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you'll get a 50-cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound" at any drug store. Millions of bottles of this old famous Sago Tea Recipe, improved by the addition of other Ingredients, are ,sold annually, says a well know druggist here, be cause it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it has been applied. Those whose hair Is turning gray or becoming faded havo a surprise await ing them, because after one or two ap plications the gray hair vanishes and your locks becomo luxuriantly dark and beautiful. This is the ago of youth. Gray haired, unattractive folks aren't want ed around, so get busy with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound tonight and you'll bo delighted with your dark, handsome hair and your youth ful appearance within a few days. This preparation Is a toilet requisite and is not intended for the cure, mitU gation or prevention of disease. Ad vertisement nn STII SERIN 8? HMD GAMER OF METHODIST MH "Tho Sword and the Spirit" was the subject of tbe stirring sermon preach ed by Rev. C. R, Garver yesterday at the Methodist church. The theme was a timely one, in view of the present situation In which the world ; is found. The text was taken from ' Ephosians Vl-17; "Take the sword of the Spirit, which is tho word of God." The sermon, In part, follows: "Paul hero shows ub the picture of the Christian soldier whose weapon of defense as well as offense is the word of God. And what a sword it is. Biblical history gives us the rec-1 ord of some mighty swordsmen who ' used this weapon in conquering war. fare. The most export swordsman I of them all was the blessod Christ. ' 'And the tempter came at Him and said: 'If Thou art the son of God. i : MOUNTAIN CLIMBER HAS LEG : BROKEN WHEN A BOULDER : .. ILLS DOWN FROM CUFF While In the mountains cast of North Ogden yesterday Robert Nevins, manager of the kodak department of Browning Brothers, met with a ser ious accident. A loosened boulder, rolling down the mountain side, struck him, causing a compound fracture of the left leg, numerous cuts and bruises of the body and a possible fracture of tho right knee. The boulder -was loosened by William Sylva, a companion. In his efforts to assist Nevins, Sylva accidentally dis charged a pistol he was carrying and shot himself in the leg, the bullet tear ing loose a piece of his shin bone and causing a deep flesh wound. Nevins, in company with young Sylva and another boy named Clyde Redfleld, started out early In the morning to take some scenic pictures. They went to North Ogden and thence east Into tho mountains through Jumpoff canyon. They reached early to the top of the rldgo by noon, when Nevins stopped to take some pictures and Sylva continued climbing towards the top of the mountain. Redfield re-J mained with Nevins, but was far I enough away to miss being struck byl the boulder as it came crashing down the steep slope. Sylva stopped to rest a moment, leaning against a large rock, weighing moro than a ton, which had become undermined by the rains and frosts so that the slight pressure of Sylva's body started it on its dash of destruc tion. Striking another boulder, it broke in two, one of the largo pieces striking Nevins and knocking him down the mountainside. When the piece of rock had passed over the prostrate man, Redfield and Sylva, appalled at the accident, rushed to his aid. Nevins was lying in a heap, badly crushed and unable to move. Leaving Redfield with the injured man, Sylva hurried to the Industrial school for assistance. The long jour ney took him nearly two hours and he was exhausted when he reached the institution. command that these stones be made bread 'The Master's hand was on the hilt of His sword and He drew it forth and said: It is written that man shall not live by bread alone.' Tho scene now changes but the same combat is still on. 'All these things will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship me." Jesus whipped out His Bword and said: 'Get thde hence, Satan, for it is written: 'Thou shalt worship tho Lord thy God and Him only shalt thou serve.' "Now let us look at another battle scene where one of the Master's dis clpls, a very skillful sworGsman, is in combat with a very deadly foo. At Lystra Paul finds the cripple, who had been unable to walk from birth, I perceiving that he had faith to be-' lieve, Paul said with a loud voice, j 'Stand upright on thy feet.' And ho j leaped and walked. This so aroused i the people who witnessed this miracle i that they cried: 'The gods are come! clown to us in the likeness of men.' And tho priests brought oxen and ' garianos ana would have done sac . jrifice with the people; but Paul, fear, j ing that his God would not be ex alted, drew out his sword and used it for God's glory. Wo are also men of like passions with you, and preach unto you that ye should turn from these vanities unto the living God, which made heaven and earth, and all things that are therein." Ho used the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God. "It is this sword -which Paul urges these young disciples at Ephesus to got hold of at all costs, and never to leave it rusting in tho scabbard at home. And surely there was need ot this counsel in materialistic Ogden. The papers are now filled with ac counts of bayonet fighting in tho trenches in Europe, where men come face-to-face in the hot breath of one another's passions, and aro locked in the death grip of hand-to-hand encounters. "In Ephesus the spiritual warfare was not fought at long range; the foes of the soul were exceedingly real and very near, our enemy was upon you in a moment, and the only safe way to meet his attack, was to keep your hand firm upon your sword. Not long ago a magazino pic ture of a European battle field ap peared in which a load of hay was brought into camp and the soldiers wore piercing it with their swordo to find out if a spy was hidden in jt In the warfare of the soul what frag rant disguises does the devil select In which to secret himself. It be hooves us to have the sword of tho Spirit ready at all times." oo TEXAN IN CASUALTY LIST. OTTAWA. Ont Oct. 13. M. J. Carr, Mexaca, Toxas, is listed among the wounded on today's casualty list. BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the substi tute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. k People afflicted with bad breath find Sulck relief through Dr. Edwards' Hive Tablets. V The pleasant, sugar coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gently but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets without griping, pain or any disagreeable effects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac tice among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets aro purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a wqek and note the effect. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. Advcrtlsemeni- State Parole Officer G. A. Goates telephoned the sheriffs office. Then selecting four husky boys from the school, all made ready to go with tho rescue party. Tho boys rendered gal lant service on the return, carrying the injured man five miles on a stretcher, the distance necessary to reach tho ambulance summoned from Larkln's. The rescue party proceed as far up the mountain by auto as the roads and trails would permit and then, with Sylva as a guide, they went on up to where Nevms lay. The Injured boy was given first aid by Mr. Goates and two of the-party went, to a spring some distance down the mountainside and brought him water. The. injured man had been several hours without water and was in al most a fainting condition. Sylva, with another boy, started for the water. He was carrying Nevins' automatic pistol, which he took from its holster to examine. The weapon was discharged and tho bullet struck the boy In the leg, cutting away some of the shin bone and inflicting a serious flesh wound. ' He was able to proceed with the party on foot, however, and was talten to his home for treatment as soon as they arrived in the city. The trip from tho scene of the acci dent to the waiting autos was a tedious 'and trying one. Nevins was placed on ra stretcher and the members of the j party took turns carrying him down I the steep mountain. The four boys from the Industrial school bore the brunt of this task, however, and Mr. Goates stated that they probably would be released from tho school on parole for their heroic efforts. Nevins was hurried to the Dee hos pital, where an examination revealed the full extent of his injuries. The left leg was fractured in two places, the right knee was injured and possibly broken, his right hand is badly lac erated and his body is cut and bruised in many places. The injuries will not prove fatal, the physician making the examination stated. CARREL TEACHING OUR ARMY DOCTORS1 fig . : wik'- fill . -1 liu, . tlti 18tf4 : JtffisfOQo ' Dr. Alexis CarreL At the Rockefeller Instituto war Jemonstration hospital Dr. Alexis Carrel, the noted surgeon, has been bstmcting American army officers bi the latest methods of treating' 7?ounds on the battlefields. In addi tion to his gTeat skill as a surgeon Dr. Carrel has had the bonefit of axperience in war hospitals on the (vestern front. ASKS TO BE SENT TO INWIL SCHOOL Walter Stazel, 18, who says he lives In Salt Lake, was placed In tho city jail Saturday afternoon after ho explained that ho wanted to be sent to the State Industrial school that he might learn to read and write. Stazol is thought to bo demented and will be examined. It was not so much his unusual request as his actions which made the officers believe him to be demented. nn LISTEN TO THIS., "Didn't I understand you to say that this lad voluntarily confessed to play ing truant?" asked a school attend anco officer, addressing the mother of a Bmall and dirty boy. "Yes, sir, he did," the woman re plied. "I just had to persuade him a littlo, and then ho told mo that wholo thing voluntarily." "How did you persuade him?" "Wei, first I gave him a good hid ing," said the parent, "and then I put him to bed without any supper, and took his clothes away, and told him ho'd stay in bed till ho confessed what he'd done, and that I should punish him again in tho morning. And in less than a half an hour he told me the wholo story of his own accord." rr French and English, as wall as American women in Franco, have formed an organization, tho object of which is to look after the American soldier boys now on the other sido of the ocean. H &s beneficial as if is. enjoy- : P B il is POPoSar the world over; :' n . I d bfmi? a long watch or a hard I m lob Is made more 'cheerful : ' m I j by this loog-lasfing refreshment. Q I 2 &ffer Every Meal jfi The Flavor Lasts' H I filMHE URGED 10 SUPPORT LIBERTY LOSffl j Walter N. Farr, teller in the Ogden State bank, carried the Liberty loan message to the people of Riverdale ward yesterday. He made an address before the members Of the Mutual Improvement association at the ward meeting house last evening, pointing out the duty of tho farmer in giving his dollars to support the government by the purchase of these bonds. Mr. Farr pointed out that by the purchase of a bond, the purchaser might be saving tho life of a Utah man, fighting in Europe for tho great cause of universal freedom. By con trast, ho drew a word picture of what this country and the entire world would be If the lust of the German kaisorjs not checked. It was shown that tho money the farmer parts with now is merely a loan to Uncle Sam. The nation is not asking that he give his dollars,' but s. It Built Him Up and Made Him Strong Newaygo, Mich. "My little boy was in a delicate, weak, emaciated condition anH had a cough so we had to keep him out of school for a year. Nothing seemed to help him untiL Vinol was recommended, and the change it made in him was rpmark able. It has built him up and made him strong so his cough is almost entirely gone. We can not recom mend Vinol too highly.' -Mrs. B. N. Hanlon. Mothers of weak, delicate, ailing children arc asked to try this famous cod liver and iron tonic on our guar antee. Children love to take it. Culley Drug Co., Ogden., and at the best drug otore in every town and city In the-country, Advertisement that he loan them and at a gain to himself. Unless he is willing to invest every dollar now, the time might come when he is forced to give them to check the greed of a tyrant, who would gladly enslave all the world ex cept his own countrymen. The farmer has been prosperous this seasou. Never in the history of the intermountain region have the crops been so bountiful. Tho govern ment has shown the farmers how they can organize into bodies for the con servation of their, crops. Now that they havo received ample returns for their efforts this summer, he asks them to loan him the money theyi were shown how to earn. I These and other points were touch ed upon by the speaker and after the meeting he was told that his remarks were most enlightening and that the Liberty loan had been shown them in a far different way. The members expressed themselves as ready to aid the government in the purchasing of bonds to their fullest power. They volunteered to see their neighbors and induce them to purchase as many of tho bonds as possible. oo HEW Til SCHEDULE ' IS. li EFFECTIVE Ancw train schedule for tho Bam berger Electric line became effective yesterday. One of the important changes in the schedule is the leav ing of a late train from Ogden, which was brought about through the pro tests of Ogden business men and thea ter managers that residents of the districts along the line south of Og den had stopped coming to Ogden for their amusements because they could not get back home the same evening. This train will leave at 11:05 p. m.; formerly it left at 10:30 p. m. The morning trains leave at 6:15 and :17 instead of 6 and 7 a. m , as formerly. The train which formerly left at S:30 p. m., now will leave at 9 p. m. oo Miss Florence Wardwell, of New York City, has begun a campaign to educate the servants of the wealthy at Newport In the art of saving food. oo Miss Edith Miller, of Wakefield, Mass., will enter Simmons college : this fall at the age of 15, being the youngest freshman ever admitted to ' "the institution. oo Mrs. Esther B. Darling, of Nome, Alaska, who sold many racing dogs to the French government, has receiv ed the Cross of War won by Alaska , dogs for service at the front In trans- ; porting 90 tons of shells to an isolated 5 1 IH post under fire. So great is the need for all possible 1 aid to the allies' fighting forces on the h western front that women have been j I pressed into service as mechanicians j; I at the French aviation stations. l IH oo s jm Miss Dorothy Jones, of Montclair, IH N. J., has sailed for France, where ft she will drive a war ambulance. u For the first time in the world's history, Jewish women have voted for I , jM representation m a Jewish congress. J j Suffered Much Pain, Yet Had 1 H to Work. Finally Cured by . Lydia E. PinkhanVs Veg- I Jt etable Compound. Toledo, Ohio "I am a widow and go ' I ' out nursing, and suffered froma ;'j , IH -feraale trouble that caused a great deal of soreness i across my back; and ' through my abdo- , men. Sometimes it would be very pain- ful after a hard day's work. I read t about Lydia E. Finkham's Vege- . table Compound and tried it and it . I has helped me won- derfully, so the soreness is all gone now. I believe Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound is just the remedy for female troubles." Mrs. Elizabeth John, R. F. D. No. 4. Toledo, Ohio. Lydia IE. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- Eound, made from native roots and erbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and today is regarded as the most successful remedy for female ills. Thero are thousands of voluntary testi monialB on file in tho Pinkham labora tory at Lynn, Mass., to prove this CHICHESTER S FILLS S M jyP. THE DIAMOND II E AND. f VT 1 y-OtV l-dlc! A.Uyour DrugcUlforVV ' H Jt i C&feU Ohl..he.lop' Diamond BrndtfV H bnjfli HI1U la Bed cad Gold aclilcf M "i-v Tfip3 botes, idled irith Blue Ribbon. V 1 Sh 3 CvS Tube no other. Bur or your " . H i'l m UrnrcJit. AikforCIII.OnF.R-TER'S H t Jf DIAMOND 1IRAND PILLS, for US , H rSTSOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE r JM